fbpx
Wikipedia

Bass trombone

The bass trombone (German: Bassposaune, Italian: trombone basso) is the bass instrument in the trombone family of brass instruments. Modern instruments are pitched in the same B♭ as the tenor trombone but with a larger bore, bell and mouthpiece to facilitate low register playing, and usually two valves to fill in the missing range immediately above the pedal tones.

Bass trombone
Bass trombone with two valves in F and D
Brass instrument
Classification
Hornbostel–Sachs classification423.22
(Sliding aerophone sounded by lip vibration)
DevelopedLate 16th century
Playing range
Related instruments
Musicians

History edit

 
Trombones in Syntagma Musicum (1614–20), by Michael Praetorius

The earliest bass trombones were the bass sackbuts, usually pitched in G, F, or E♭ below the B♭ tenor. They had a smaller bore and less flared bell than modern instruments, and a longer slide with an attached handle to allow slide positions otherwise beyond the reach of a fully outstretched arm. The earliest known surviving specimen is an instrument in G built in Germany in 1593.[1] This instrument matches descriptions and illustrations by Praetorius from his 1614–20 Syntagma Musicum.[2] These bass sackbuts were sometimes called terz-posaun, quart-posaun, and quint-posaun (Old German, lit.'third' or 'fourth' or 'fifth trombone', referring to intervals below B♭), though sometimes quartposaune was used generally to refer to any of these.[3] The octav-posaun in B♭ refers to a very large and unwieldy predecessor of the contrabass trombone, a full octave below the tenor.[4]

 
Bass sackbut in G, built 1593. Rijksmuseum, Netherlands[1]

Bass sackbuts were used in Europe during the Renaissance and early Baroque periods. By the 18th century the F and E♭ bass trombones were used in Germany, Austria and Sweden, and the E♭ bass trombone in France.

The "tenor-bass" trombone edit

German instrument maker Christian Friedrich Sattler in 1821 created an instrument he called the Tenorbaßposaune (lit.'tenor-bass trombone'), a tenor in B♭ built with the larger bore and mouthpiece from the F bass trombone. It facilitated playing bass trombone parts in the low register, but was missing notes below E2. Treatise author Georges Kastner and other contemporary writers described a dissatisfaction with bass instruments in F or E♭, due to their slow and unwieldy slides. The invention of valves was quickly applied to create valve trombones in the 1830s which replaced the slide altogether; these became popular in military bands and Italian opera.[5]

In 1839 Sattler invented the quartventil (lit.'fourth valve'), a valve attachment for a B♭ tenor trombone to lower the instrument a fourth into F.[6] Intended to bridge the range gap of the tenor trombone between E2 and B♭1, it was quickly adopted for bass trombone parts, particularly in Germany. These instruments in B♭/F gradually replaced the larger bass trombones in F and E♭ over the course of the 19th and early 20th centuries.[7] Late Romantic German composers specifying Tenorbaßposaune in scores intended a B♭/F trombone capable of playing below E2; Arnold Schoenberg called for four in Gurre-Lieder (1911).

The bass trombone in Britain edit

 
Bass trombone in G with D valve. St Cecilia's Hall, Musical Instrument Museums Edinburgh

From about the mid-nineteenth century, the bass trombone in G enjoyed a period of extended popularity in France and especially Britain.[8] In brass bands in Britain, the G bass trombone was standard, built largely by makers Besson and Boosey & Hawkes with no valves and a slide handle for reaching the longer sixth and seventh positions. For use in British orchestras from the early twentieth century, it was often built with a D or C valve attachment. The G bass trombone was in use until the 1950s, when London orchestral players began importing larger bore American B♭ instruments, particularly by Conn.[9] The G trombone lingered on in some parts of Britain and former British colonies well into the 1980s, particularly in brass bands and period instrument orchestras.[10]

Recent developments edit

The modern bass trombone has evolved from the large-bore B♭/F tenor-bass trombones in the late 19th century. In the early 20th century, manufacturers attempted to solve the problem of the missing low B♮1 on such instruments by adding a second valve. In the 1920s, manufacturers Conn and Holton made B♭/F bass trombones with a Stellventil (lit.'static valve') that could lower the F tubing to E when manually set. The first true double-valve trombone (where the second valve can be operated while playing) was made by Olds in 1937, using a second dependent valve to lower the F attachment a semitone to E.[11]

In the 1950s, some North American orchestral bass trombonists had double-valve instruments custom-built, and these designs were eventually adopted by manufacturers. In 1961, American maker Vincent Bach released their double-valve "50B2" model with a second dependent E valve, modified in 1956 for the bass trombonist with Minneapolis Symphony.[11] In the late 1960s custom instruments appeared using a second independent valve, lowering the instrument to G and to E♭ when engaged with the first valve.[12] The first commercially available trombone using independent valves was the Olds S-24G model in 1973. Although new to the bass trombone, this idea was anticipated in Germany in the 1920s by Ernst Dehmel's design for a contrabass trombone in F with two independent valves.[11]

 
 
 
Bass trombones with two valves. Dependent standard rotary valves, left; independent Thayer axial flow valves, center; independent Hagmann valves, right.

The early 1980s saw the emergence of the axial flow valve, known as the "Thayer" valve after its American inventor, Orla Thayer. Trombonists frequently cite its more free-blowing, open-feeling playing characteristics and sound.[13] It was gradually adopted on high-end trombone models from US manufacturers by the 1990s, particularly from Edwards, S. E. Shires and Vincent Bach. This sparked further innovation in free-blowing valves; Conn patented its own CL2000 valve developed with Swedish trombonist Christian Lindberg, and the Swiss Hagmann valve was adopted by European manufacturers.[13]

Construction edit

The modern bass trombone uses the same 9 feet (2.7 m) length of tubing as the tenor trombone, but with a wider bore, a larger bell, and a larger mouthpiece which facilitate playing in the low register.[6] Typical specifications are a bore size of 0.562 inches (14.3 mm) in the slide with a bell from 9 to 10+12 inches (23 to 27 cm) in diameter.[14]

Dependent and independent valves edit

 
Dependent (left) and independent valves (right) on the modern bass trombone

The bass trombone has typically two valves that lower the pitch of the instrument when engaged, to facilitate the register between the B♭1 pedal in first position and the E2 second partial in seventh.[15] The first valve lowers the key of the instrument a fourth to F. The second (when engaged with the first) will lower the instrument to D (or less commonly, E♭).[16]

The second valve can be configured in one of two ways, referred to as either "dependent" or "independent" (sometimes also called "in-line"). In a dependent system, the second valve is fitted to the tubing of the first valve, and can only be engaged in combination with the first.[17] In an independent system, the second valve is fitted to the main tubing next to the first valve, and can be used independently. The second independent valve typically lowers the instrument to G♭, and D when engaged in tandem with the first valve. Less commonly the second valve is tuned to G (combining to give E♭), or has a tuning slide that can tune the valve to either G or G♭ as desired.[12]

Single-valve instruments edit

 
A single-valve bass trombone in B♭/F

The low B1 note immediately above the pedal range is unobtainable on a standard trombone slide with a single valve in F.[18] Bass trombones from the 19th and early 20th century were sometimes made with a valve attachment in E rather than F, or with an alternative tuning slide to lower the pitch to E♭. Today, single-valve bass trombones have a tuning slide on the valve section that is long enough to enable access to the low B1 by lowering the pitch from F to E.[19]

Range edit

 
Range of the modern bass trombone.

The range of the modern bass trombone with two valves is fully chromatic from the lowest pedal B♭0 with both valves engaged (or even A0 with valve slides extended), up to at least B♭4. Although much of the established orchestral repertoire infrequently strays below B♭1 or above G4, and is typically written in the lower registers, there are some exceptions. French composers in the 19th century and early 20th century wrote third trombone parts for tenor trombone, writing as high as A4 (Bizet L'Arlésienne, Franck Symphony in D minor), and omitting notes below E2 except for occasional pedal notes (Berlioz used pedal B♭1 and A1 in Symphonie fantastique (1830), and wrote to pedal G♯1 in his Grande Messe des morts ).[20] English composers in the same period were writing for a bass trombone in G, and avoided writing below D♭2, even though instruments were made with a valve attachment in D by around 1900.[10]

The 20th century saw further extensions of the bass trombone range, such as the fortissimo pedal D1 in Berg's Drei Orchesterstücke (1915), and the high B4 in Kodály's 1927 Háry János suite.[20] Contemporary orchestral and solo classical pieces, as well as modern jazz arrangements, often further exploit the wide tonal range of the bass trombone.

Repertoire edit

Since the Romantic period, the trombone section of an orchestra, wind ensemble, or British-style brass band usually consists of two tenor trombones and at least one bass trombone.[21] In a modern jazz big band, at least one of the trombonists will play bass trombone, often serving as the anchor of the trombone section or doubling the double bass and baritone saxophone.[22]

George Roberts (affectionately known as "Mr. Bass Trombone") was one of the first players to champion the solo possibilities of the instrument.[23] One of the first major classical solo works for the instrument was the Concerto for Bass Trombone by Thom Ritter George.[24][25]

Images edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Bastrombone, Pierre Colbert, 1593". Rijksmuseum (in Dutch). Retrieved 2022-05-02.
  2. ^ Yeo 2021, pp. 18–19, "bass trombone".
  3. ^ Baines, Anthony C.; Herbert, Trevor (2001). "Quartposaune". Grove Music Online (8th ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.22657. ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0.
  4. ^ Bevan 2000, p. 500.
  5. ^ Guion 2010, pp. 49–53.
  6. ^ a b Herbert 2006, p. 196.
  7. ^ Guion 2010.
  8. ^ Herbert 2006, p. 252.
  9. ^ Yeo 2021, p. 61, "G bass trombone".
  10. ^ a b Dixon, Gavin (2010). "Farewell to the Kidshifter: The Decline of the G Bass Trombone in the UK 1950–1980" (PDF). Historic Brass Society Journal. 22: 75–89. Retrieved 7 October 2022.
  11. ^ a b c Yeo, Douglas (July 2015). "Evolution: The Double-Valve Bass Trombone" (PDF). ITA Journal. International Trombone Association. 43 (3): 34–43. Retrieved 5 October 2022.
  12. ^ a b Yeo 2021, p. 73, "independent valves".
  13. ^ a b Yeo 2021, p. 13, "axial flow valve".
  14. ^ Guion 2010, p. 64.
  15. ^ Herbert 2006, p. 29.
  16. ^ Herbert 2006, p. 182.
  17. ^ Yeo 2021, pp. 43–44, "dependent valves".
  18. ^ Herbert 2006, p. 197.
  19. ^ Guion 2010, p. 61.
  20. ^ a b Yeo 2017.
  21. ^ Herbert 2000, p. 174.
  22. ^ Tomaro, Mike; Wilson, John (2009). Instrumental Jazz Arranging: A Comprehensive and Practical Guide. Milwaukee, WI: Hal Leonard. p. 200. ISBN 978-1-4234-5274-4. OCLC 177016012.
  23. ^ Yeager, Johnathan K. (2006). Interpretive performance techniques and lyrical innovations on the bass trombone: a study of recorded performances by George Roberts, 'Mr. Bass Trombone' (DMA thesis). University of North Texas. p. 1. OCLC 1269365680. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
  24. ^ Moore, Donald Scott (2009). The “Concerto for Bass Trombone” by Thom Ritter George and the beginning of modern bass trombone solo performance (DMA thesis). University of Cincinnati. p. 51. OCLC 501334342. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
  25. ^ Rose, Keith Robert (2010). A Performance Preparation Guide to Concerto for Bass Trombone and Orchestra (1964, Revised 2001) Composed by Thom Ritter George (born 1942). Open Access Theses & Dissertations (M.Mus thesis). University of Texas at El Paso. OCLC 670436765. Retrieved 31 July 2022.

Bibliography edit

bass, trombone, bass, trombone, german, bassposaune, italian, trombone, basso, bass, instrument, trombone, family, brass, instruments, modern, instruments, pitched, same, tenor, trombone, with, larger, bore, bell, mouthpiece, facilitate, register, playing, usu. The bass trombone German Bassposaune Italian trombone basso is the bass instrument in the trombone family of brass instruments Modern instruments are pitched in the same B as the tenor trombone but with a larger bore bell and mouthpiece to facilitate low register playing and usually two valves to fill in the missing range immediately above the pedal tones Bass tromboneBass trombone with two valves in F and DBrass instrumentClassificationWindBrassAerophoneHornbostel Sachs classification423 22 Sliding aerophone sounded by lip vibration DevelopedLate 16th centuryPlaying rangeRelated instrumentsTromboneContrabass tromboneCimbassoMusiciansBen van DijkGeorge RobertsDouglas Yeo Contents 1 History 1 1 The tenor bass trombone 1 2 The bass trombone in Britain 1 3 Recent developments 2 Construction 2 1 Dependent and independent valves 2 2 Single valve instruments 3 Range 4 Repertoire 5 Images 6 References 7 BibliographyHistory editFor broader coverage of this topic see Trombone History nbsp Trombones in Syntagma Musicum 1614 20 by Michael PraetoriusThe earliest bass trombones were the bass sackbuts usually pitched in G F or E below the B tenor They had a smaller bore and less flared bell than modern instruments and a longer slide with an attached handle to allow slide positions otherwise beyond the reach of a fully outstretched arm The earliest known surviving specimen is an instrument in G built in Germany in 1593 1 This instrument matches descriptions and illustrations by Praetorius from his 1614 20 Syntagma Musicum 2 These bass sackbuts were sometimes called terz posaun quart posaun and quint posaun Old German lit third or fourth or fifth trombone referring to intervals below B though sometimes quartposaune was used generally to refer to any of these 3 The octav posaun in B refers to a very large and unwieldy predecessor of the contrabass trombone a full octave below the tenor 4 nbsp Bass sackbut in G built 1593 Rijksmuseum Netherlands 1 Bass sackbuts were used in Europe during the Renaissance and early Baroque periods By the 18th century the F and E bass trombones were used in Germany Austria and Sweden and the E bass trombone in France The tenor bass trombone edit German instrument maker Christian Friedrich Sattler in 1821 created an instrument he called the Tenorbassposaune lit tenor bass trombone a tenor in B built with the larger bore and mouthpiece from the F bass trombone It facilitated playing bass trombone parts in the low register but was missing notes below E2 Treatise author Georges Kastner and other contemporary writers described a dissatisfaction with bass instruments in F or E due to their slow and unwieldy slides The invention of valves was quickly applied to create valve trombones in the 1830s which replaced the slide altogether these became popular in military bands and Italian opera 5 In 1839 Sattler invented the quartventil lit fourth valve a valve attachment for a B tenor trombone to lower the instrument a fourth into F 6 Intended to bridge the range gap of the tenor trombone between E2 and B 1 it was quickly adopted for bass trombone parts particularly in Germany These instruments in B F gradually replaced the larger bass trombones in F and E over the course of the 19th and early 20th centuries 7 Late Romantic German composers specifying Tenorbassposaune in scores intended a B F trombone capable of playing below E2 Arnold Schoenberg called for four in Gurre Lieder 1911 The bass trombone in Britain edit nbsp Bass trombone in G with D valve St Cecilia s Hall Musical Instrument Museums EdinburghFrom about the mid nineteenth century the bass trombone in G enjoyed a period of extended popularity in France and especially Britain 8 In brass bands in Britain the G bass trombone was standard built largely by makers Besson and Boosey amp Hawkes with no valves and a slide handle for reaching the longer sixth and seventh positions For use in British orchestras from the early twentieth century it was often built with a D or C valve attachment The G bass trombone was in use until the 1950s when London orchestral players began importing larger bore American B instruments particularly by Conn 9 The G trombone lingered on in some parts of Britain and former British colonies well into the 1980s particularly in brass bands and period instrument orchestras 10 Recent developments edit The modern bass trombone has evolved from the large bore B F tenor bass trombones in the late 19th century In the early 20th century manufacturers attempted to solve the problem of the missing low B 1 on such instruments by adding a second valve In the 1920s manufacturers Conn and Holton made B F bass trombones with a Stellventil lit static valve that could lower the F tubing to E when manually set The first true double valve trombone where the second valve can be operated while playing was made by Olds in 1937 using a second dependent valve to lower the F attachment a semitone to E 11 In the 1950s some North American orchestral bass trombonists had double valve instruments custom built and these designs were eventually adopted by manufacturers In 1961 American maker Vincent Bach released their double valve 50B2 model with a second dependent E valve modified in 1956 for the bass trombonist with Minneapolis Symphony 11 In the late 1960s custom instruments appeared using a second independent valve lowering the instrument to G and to E when engaged with the first valve 12 The first commercially available trombone using independent valves was the Olds S 24G model in 1973 Although new to the bass trombone this idea was anticipated in Germany in the 1920s by Ernst Dehmel s design for a contrabass trombone in F with two independent valves 11 nbsp nbsp nbsp Bass trombones with two valves Dependent standard rotary valves left independent Thayer axial flow valves center independent Hagmann valves right The early 1980s saw the emergence of the axial flow valve known as the Thayer valve after its American inventor Orla Thayer Trombonists frequently cite its more free blowing open feeling playing characteristics and sound 13 It was gradually adopted on high end trombone models from US manufacturers by the 1990s particularly from Edwards S E Shires and Vincent Bach This sparked further innovation in free blowing valves Conn patented its own CL2000 valve developed with Swedish trombonist Christian Lindberg and the Swiss Hagmann valve was adopted by European manufacturers 13 Construction editMain article Trombone Construction The modern bass trombone uses the same 9 feet 2 7 m length of tubing as the tenor trombone but with a wider bore a larger bell and a larger mouthpiece which facilitate playing in the low register 6 Typical specifications are a bore size of 0 562 inches 14 3 mm in the slide with a bell from 9 to 10 1 2 inches 23 to 27 cm in diameter 14 Dependent and independent valves edit nbsp Dependent left and independent valves right on the modern bass tromboneThe bass trombone has typically two valves that lower the pitch of the instrument when engaged to facilitate the register between the B 1 pedal in first position and the E2 second partial in seventh 15 The first valve lowers the key of the instrument a fourth to F The second when engaged with the first will lower the instrument to D or less commonly E 16 The second valve can be configured in one of two ways referred to as either dependent or independent sometimes also called in line In a dependent system the second valve is fitted to the tubing of the first valve and can only be engaged in combination with the first 17 In an independent system the second valve is fitted to the main tubing next to the first valve and can be used independently The second independent valve typically lowers the instrument to G and D when engaged in tandem with the first valve Less commonly the second valve is tuned to G combining to give E or has a tuning slide that can tune the valve to either G or G as desired 12 Single valve instruments edit nbsp A single valve bass trombone in B FThe low B1 note immediately above the pedal range is unobtainable on a standard trombone slide with a single valve in F 18 Bass trombones from the 19th and early 20th century were sometimes made with a valve attachment in E rather than F or with an alternative tuning slide to lower the pitch to E Today single valve bass trombones have a tuning slide on the valve section that is long enough to enable access to the low B1 by lowering the pitch from F to E 19 Range edit nbsp Range of the modern bass trombone The range of the modern bass trombone with two valves is fully chromatic from the lowest pedal B 0 with both valves engaged or even A0 with valve slides extended up to at least B 4 Although much of the established orchestral repertoire infrequently strays below B 1 or above G4 and is typically written in the lower registers there are some exceptions French composers in the 19th century and early 20th century wrote third trombone parts for tenor trombone writing as high as A4 Bizet L Arlesienne Franck Symphony in D minor and omitting notes below E2 except for occasional pedal notes Berlioz used pedal B 1 and A1 in Symphonie fantastique 1830 and wrote to pedal G 1 in his Grande Messe des morts 20 English composers in the same period were writing for a bass trombone in G and avoided writing below D 2 even though instruments were made with a valve attachment in D by around 1900 10 The 20th century saw further extensions of the bass trombone range such as the fortissimo pedal D1 in Berg s Drei Orchesterstucke 1915 and the high B4 in Kodaly s 1927 Hary Janos suite 20 Contemporary orchestral and solo classical pieces as well as modern jazz arrangements often further exploit the wide tonal range of the bass trombone Repertoire editSince the Romantic period the trombone section of an orchestra wind ensemble or British style brass band usually consists of two tenor trombones and at least one bass trombone 21 In a modern jazz big band at least one of the trombonists will play bass trombone often serving as the anchor of the trombone section or doubling the double bass and baritone saxophone 22 George Roberts affectionately known as Mr Bass Trombone was one of the first players to champion the solo possibilities of the instrument 23 One of the first major classical solo works for the instrument was the Concerto for Bass Trombone by Thom Ritter George 24 25 Images edit nbsp Bass trombone in F nbsp Bass trombone in E References edit a b Bastrombone Pierre Colbert 1593 Rijksmuseum in Dutch Retrieved 2022 05 02 Yeo 2021 pp 18 19 bass trombone Baines Anthony C Herbert Trevor 2001 Quartposaune Grove Music Online 8th ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 gmo 9781561592630 article 22657 ISBN 978 1 56159 263 0 Bevan 2000 p 500 Guion 2010 pp 49 53 a b Herbert 2006 p 196 Guion 2010 Herbert 2006 p 252 Yeo 2021 p 61 G bass trombone a b Dixon Gavin 2010 Farewell to the Kidshifter The Decline of the G Bass Trombone in the UK 1950 1980 PDF Historic Brass Society Journal 22 75 89 Retrieved 7 October 2022 a b c Yeo Douglas July 2015 Evolution The Double Valve Bass Trombone PDF ITA Journal International Trombone Association 43 3 34 43 Retrieved 5 October 2022 a b Yeo 2021 p 73 independent valves a b Yeo 2021 p 13 axial flow valve Guion 2010 p 64 Herbert 2006 p 29 Herbert 2006 p 182 Yeo 2021 pp 43 44 dependent valves Herbert 2006 p 197 Guion 2010 p 61 a b Yeo 2017 Herbert 2000 p 174 Tomaro Mike Wilson John 2009 Instrumental Jazz Arranging A Comprehensive and Practical Guide Milwaukee WI Hal Leonard p 200 ISBN 978 1 4234 5274 4 OCLC 177016012 Yeager Johnathan K 2006 Interpretive performance techniques and lyrical innovations on the bass trombone a study of recorded performances by George Roberts Mr Bass Trombone DMA thesis University of North Texas p 1 OCLC 1269365680 Retrieved 31 July 2022 Moore Donald Scott 2009 The Concerto for Bass Trombone by Thom Ritter George and the beginning of modern bass trombone solo performance DMA thesis University of Cincinnati p 51 OCLC 501334342 Retrieved 31 July 2022 Rose Keith Robert 2010 A Performance Preparation Guide to Concerto for Bass Trombone and Orchestra 1964 Revised 2001 Composed by Thom Ritter George born 1942 Open Access Theses amp Dissertations M Mus thesis University of Texas at El Paso OCLC 670436765 Retrieved 31 July 2022 Bibliography editBevan Clifford 2000 The Tuba Family 2nd ed Winchester Piccolo Press ISBN 1 872203 30 2 OCLC 993463927 OL 19533420M Wikidata Q111040769 Guion David M 2010 A History of the Trombone Toronto Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 81087 445 9 OCLC 725775517 OL 24019524M Wikidata Q111039945 Herbert Trevor ed 2000 The British Brass Band A Musical and Social History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 816698 2 OCLC 42798200 Herbert Trevor 2006 The Trombone Yale Musical Instrument Series New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300235 75 3 OCLC 1007305405 OL 30593699M Wikidata Q111039091 Yeo Douglas 2017 The One Hundred Essential Works for the Symphonic Bass Trombonist Maple City Encore Music Publishers ISBN 978 1 5323 3145 9 Wikidata Q111957781 Yeo Douglas 2021 An Illustrated Dictionary for the Modern Trombone Tuba and Euphonium Player Dictionaries for the Modern Musician Illustrator Lennie Peterson Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 538 15966 8 LCCN 2021020757 OCLC 1249799159 OL 34132790M Wikidata Q111040546 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bass trombone amp oldid 1188623958, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.